Abstract
Excitation of O2 by low energy electrons leads to its dissociation with the formation of metastable oxygen atoms. The metastable atoms which have been detected are in the 3sbS° state at 9.14 eV and in long-lived high-Rydberg states. A molecular beam time-of-flight method is used to measure their translational energy. Electron impact excitation functions are given for the formation of metastable atoms. High-Rydberg atoms result from dissociation of initially formed high-Rydberg molecules. Because a high-Rydberg molecular orbital is nonbonding, dissociation is determined by states of the core O2+ ion. This mechanism is supported by general agreement between the observed kinetic energy distribution of high-Rydberg atoms and the kinetic energy distribution of O+ from dissociative ionization of O2.The fragment kinetic energy distributions are discussed in terms of known and predicted states of O2 and O2+.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Freund, R. S. (1971). Dissociation by Electron Impact of Oxygen into Metastable Quintet and Long-Lived High-Rydberg Atoms. The Journal of Chemical Physics, 54(7), 3142–3156. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1675301
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